xthexder
@xthexder@l.sw0.com
- Comment on Warning: Your AI-Generated Password Is a Major Security Risk. Here’s What to Use Instead 6 days ago:
I’ve seen it personally at work where the AI generates its own metadata files containing uuids that it made up, and they end up being duplicates from elsewhere in the project. Unfortunately I can’t really share links.
I’m sure you could find examples in GitHub issues
- Comment on Warning: Your AI-Generated Password Is a Major Security Risk. Here’s What to Use Instead 6 days ago:
There’s actually lots of evidence of people using AI to generate GUIDs that are infact not globally unique.
- Comment on Valve Sued By The Performing Rights Society Over Music Rights in Games Valve Doesn’t Make or Own 1 week ago:
First time?
- Comment on 10% of Firefox crashes are caused by bitflips 1 week ago:
Can confirm, my linux server has 1040 days of uptime now without a single issue.
- Comment on 10% of Firefox crashes are caused by bitflips 1 week ago:
This checks out with Linus Torvalds saying most OS crashes across linux AND windows are caused by hardware issues, and also why he uses ECC RAM.
- Comment on The green lean mean killing machine 3 weeks ago:
I had a whole wild mushroom farm going on my front lawn earlier this winterImage
- Comment on Cloudflare now serves sites in Markdown to AI agents 4 weeks ago:
How large a number are we talking? This might be impossible for a computer as well considering this being a hard problem is effectively the basis for most encryption.
- Comment on Why Cops Frequently Got Caught Planting Drugs in 2017 | Look. All technology comes with a learning curve. 5 weeks ago:
Certainly if they falsified a federal crime, the penalty shouldn’t be any less than wire fraud, which is up to 20 years in prison.
- Comment on 'Reverse Solar Panel' Generates Electricity at Night 1 month ago:
I guess we’re calling geothermal energy “reverse solar” now. This is silly marketing.
- Comment on Kernel Community Drafts a Plan For Replacing Linus Torvalds 1 month ago:
fork()
- Comment on New York Startup Builds Fridge-Sized Machine That Can Turn Air Into Gasoline 1 month ago:
This machine uses 75kWh per day to make 1 gallon of gasoline. Using the cheapest electricity in the country, that’s $9.29 per gallon (+ the machine itself is $20k).
- Comment on YouTube disabled SRV3 subtitle uploads and started deleting them on existing videos 1 month ago:
I’m sure auto-generated captions will work great for channels like Primitive Technology where there’s no actual talking and the subtitles are describing what he’s doing…
- Comment on Wine 11 runs Windows apps in Linux and macOS better than ever 1 month ago:
It seems like SketchUp uses OpenGL, which should be supported just fine by a linux GPU driver. I haven’t tried it myself, but you could maybe try running it through Proton (idk if there’s a way outside of Steam?)
- Comment on Discontinuing the Teensy at Adafruit 1 month ago:
I didn’t even realize these were being manufactured by Sparkfun now. I’ve bought all my Teensy boards straight from the original designer: www.pjrc.com/store/ (It’s been several years since I’ve bought any parts)
- Comment on [meme] choochoo 1 month ago:
Do you know how many cities are out there that have completely useless public transit? I don’t think anyone’s suggesting we build a train out to every farmer’s front door so they can get into town without a car.
There’s plenty of areas where additional bus routes and train lines would be a huge benefit, but the entire budget is being spent on car infrastructure.
(Like the Premier of Ontario who wants to build a tunnel for cars under Toronto instead of finishing the light rail projects that have been under construction for over a decade) - Comment on UK Expands Online Safety Act to Mandate Preemptive Scanning of Digital Communications 1 month ago:
I’d also argue a human monitoring your conversation would likely make similar mistakes in judgement about what’s happening, and this kind of invasion of privacy just isn’t okay in any form. There could be whole extra conversations happening that they can’t see (like speaking IRL before sending a consentual picture).
- Comment on Mama! 2 months ago:
traveling at a million light-years per millisecond
You’re only off by a factor of about 30 quadrillion.
Light (famously a type of radiation), travels take 1 year to travel a light-year, hence the name.
If you want to make it sound impressive, then astronomical units aren’t the right choice. The sun is only 1 AU away from us after all.
- Comment on X pulls Grok images after UK ban threat over undress tool 2 months ago:
I don’t think it really matters how old the target is. Generating nude images of real people without their consent is fucked up no matter how old anyone involved is.
- Comment on The Guardian view on granting legal rights to AI: humans should not give house-room to an ill-advised debate | Editorial 2 months ago:
“A computer can never be held accountable, therefore a computer must never make a management decision.”
– IBM Training Manual, 1979
We’re going so backwards…
- Comment on Stack Overflow in freefall: 78 percent drop in number of questions 2 months ago:
- Comment on Dell says the quiet part out loud: Consumers don't actually care about AI PCs — "AI probably confuses them more than it helps them" 2 months ago:
The diminishing returns are kind of insane if you compare the performance and hardware requirements of a 7b and 100b model. In some cases the smaller model can even perform better because it’s more focused and won’t be as subtle about its hallucinations.
Something is going to have to fundamentally change before we see any big improvements, because I don’t see scaling it up further ever producing AGI or even solving any of the hallucinations/ logic errors it makes.In some ways it’s a bit like the Crypto blockchain speculators saying it’s going to change the world. But in reality the vast majority of applications proposed would have been better implemented with a simple centralized database.
- Comment on "Microslop" trends in backlash to Microsoft's AI obsession 2 months ago:
It must be hard to admit he spent billions on a slop machine. Sunk cost fallacy is probably one of many things they’re fighting.
- Comment on Grok AI still being used to digitally undress women and children despite suspension pledge 2 months ago:
AI Company: We added guardrails!
The guardrails: Image
- Comment on Microsoft Office has been renamed to “Microsoft 365 Copilot app” 2 months ago:
Well on the bright side, maybe in a few years when people search for “office software” they’ll be directed to libreoffice instead of Microsoft
- Comment on Audio dongles and the ghost of USB 1 2 months ago:
“High Quality Audio” in terms of the sample rate and bit depth, but considering the quality of most of these DAC/ADCs you get integrated in cables like this, I somehow doubt the data rate is actually the limiting factor on quality.
Personally I can’t tell the difference between 192kHz and 92kHz samples rates, or 16bit and 24 bit either (maybe a young kid with perfect ears could, but they’ll probably also notice background noise due to most of these using unfiltered USB power). The dongle manufacturers seem to care more about the marketing value of bigger numbers than actual usability.
- Comment on Speed test pits six generations of Windows against each other — Windows 11 placed dead last across most benchmarks, 8.1 emerges as unexpected winner in this unscientific comparison 2 months ago:
Well considering almost every time I reboot it seems to do a windows update, those optimizations are probably running every time anyway. It’s almost fare.
- Comment on How the AI ‘bubble’ compares to history 2 months ago:
It’s not actually the transistors the break down in flash memory. Flash memory works by storing charges in what is effectively a grid of capacitors, and in order for the data to remain stored, the insulating oxide layers in the cells need to be preserved. Every time a cell gets written, a charge is forced through the insulation with high voltage, and this degrades the insulation. A single flash cell might only have a few 1000 writes before this insulation goes bad and it no longer holds data. Moddern SSDs have wear levelling techniques to make the drive as a whole last longer.
Transistors on the other hand don’t have any inherent degradation that I’m aware of other than external factors like corrosion. The first thing that’s likely to die on a GPU is the electrolytic capacitors in the power filtering electronics, which have fluid in them that dries out over many years.
- Comment on Today in “Google Broke Email” 2 months ago:
This guy should be smart enough to realize he’s complaining about not getting free storage from Google. You can’t just run a business off other people’s infrastructure and expect it to work out without any business agreement or contract. Google Workplace is a thing, and it sounds like this guy is just cheap.
- Comment on Today in “Google Broke Email” 2 months ago:
I still have gmail polling my old hotmail//live addresses, and it’s been that way since the day I signed up. Back when the slogan was still “Don’t be evil”
- Comment on Article: I switched to eSIM in 2025, and I am full of regret 2 months ago:
What prompted you to disable your eSIM? Airplane mode works just fine on its own to temporarily disable the cellular connection, and you can turn Wifi and Bluetooth back on while in airplane mode. There’s also several settings to turn off data roaming if you were worried about accidental extra charges on your phone plan.